She regularly surprises on the red carpet with spectacular outfits.
And Olivia Attwood still looked as sensational as ever as she ran some errands in her eye-catching £127,000 Mercedes-Benz G-Class on Friday.
The TV personality, 33, opted for a low-key look for a trip to her local M&S in Cheshire.
She put on some tight black leggings that showed off her slim pins and a black teddy jacket to keep warm from the cold.
The former Love Island star left the store wearing a pair of New Balance trainers and loaded her belongings into a small Chanel bag.
Olivia Attwood went makeup-free in tight leggings and a sports jacket while running errands in Cheshire on Friday.
The TV personality, 33, opted for a low-key look as she took her £127,000 G-wagon for a spin.
Olivia pulled her long golden locks into a loose updo and showed off her natural makeup-free beauty.
Just a day earlier, the star was facing a parking fine while enjoying a hearty lunch in Manchester.
The Bad Boyfriends presenter appeared in high spirits as she risked a £60 fine after visiting The Ivy restaurant in the northern city with her friend Ryan.
He left his Mercedes G-Wagon parked on the side of the road that was bordered by double yellow lines.
Her exits come after she revealed that she finds it difficult to feel sorry for herself or others in the influencer industry due to their ‘amazing lives’ and freedom to leave work.
Olivia took part in the 2017 series of Love Island, coming third with ex-boyfriend Chris Hughes, and has since achieved stratospheric fame with presenting roles on ITV and a hit podcast, So Wrong it’s Right.
But speaking to beauty expert Caroline Hirons on the Glad We Had This Chat podcast, Olivia said: ‘Of course, every job has bad sides.
‘And we should all be able to recognize the negative aspects of any job, but I find it hard to feel sorry for myself or anyone in our industry.
Olivia pulled her long golden locks into a loose updo and showed off her natural makeup-free beauty.
The former Love Islander was seen leaving the supermarket and packing her belongings into her stylish car.
‘We live the most incredible lives and it is a very privileged place.
‘When you have a platform and people want to listen to you and interact with you, I think, how lucky can you be?
‘And if you don’t like it, you can get out of it, you don’t have to stand there and keep telling everyone how much you hate it and how miserable you are.
‘You can just go and do something else. I know it sounds a bit insensitive, but I think it hits the nail on the head a bit.’
Olivia went from competing on an ITV reality show to presenting her own in less than six years when show Bad Boyfriends aired on the channel last month.
While many former Love Island contestants have struggled to come to terms with overnight fame, the Celebs Go Dating star revealed she found the whole process “liberating”.
Her exits come after she revealed she finds it difficult to feel sorry for herself or others in the influencer industry due to their ‘amazing lives’ and freedom to leave work (pictured last month).
Olivia, who had started working as a Grid Girl for Monster aged 19, said: “I was working for a lot of energy drink companies doing F1, and it was a very restrictive existence.
‘We all had to look the same, we had to have the nail color and hair color set. There was a uniform size. It was a pressure.
“It was like water off a duck’s back. So coming off Love Island, I had the experience of walking in with thousands of followers and walking out with a million, so it was very surreal.
“But I found all of this quite liberating because, for the first time, it was me as an individual and what I had to say mattered to people.
“It was exciting and I think I adjusted pretty well, you know, the hardest part for me coming off that show was the relationship and trying to manage it, and then that fell apart and it was just a disaster.”
Olivia went on to explain that an ADHD diagnosis in her early twenties helped her navigate fame because “I knew what was good and what was bad for me in terms of triggering those symptoms.”
The Caroline Hirons Glad We Had This Chat podcast is available on Apple, Spotify, and all major podcast platforms.